D2Cat Wrote:
'Cut a coupe of grooves in the bars of the rears and call it good. Cut them 1/4" wide and 3/8" or so deep. You have nothing to loose.'
Naw, not going to try to modify/improve what I have on there now, they are just too far gone for my purposes. Its time for new tires. Not really wanting to walk a mile back to the house in 105°F heat like last summer (95% humidity). Not that I couldn't use the exercise, just don't need the inconvenience.
Of course...I am fully aware you can stick a tractor with ANY tire....but I wouldn't have been buried to the frame in this case....had I gone ahead and replaced the rear tires last summer.
'Those deep lug tires were designed for rice paddies. You run them on anything but mud they'll bounce your gizzard out.'
Not sure I still have a 'gizzard' anyway.....but 'bounce' owing to wide tread lug distance is a consideration. The rudimentary seat on my tractor pretty much insures I feel every bump, hole or rough spot I go over as it is.
'Cut a coupe of grooves in the bars of the rears and call it good. Cut them 1/4" wide and 3/8" or so deep. You have nothing to loose.'
Naw, not going to try to modify/improve what I have on there now, they are just too far gone for my purposes. Its time for new tires. Not really wanting to walk a mile back to the house in 105°F heat like last summer (95% humidity). Not that I couldn't use the exercise, just don't need the inconvenience.
Of course...I am fully aware you can stick a tractor with ANY tire....but I wouldn't have been buried to the frame in this case....had I gone ahead and replaced the rear tires last summer.
'Those deep lug tires were designed for rice paddies. You run them on anything but mud they'll bounce your gizzard out.'
Not sure I still have a 'gizzard' anyway.....but 'bounce' owing to wide tread lug distance is a consideration. The rudimentary seat on my tractor pretty much insures I feel every bump, hole or rough spot I go over as it is.